Thanks to those who know for the rewording of this message.
Thank you, Gina Miller
Gina "Nanogirl" Miller
Nanotechnology Industries
http://www.nanoindustries.com
Personal: http://www.nanogirl.com
Foresight Senior Associate http://www.foresight.org
Nanotechnology Advisor Extropy Institute http://www.extropy.org
Tech-Aid Advisor http://www.tech-aid.info/t/all-about.html
Email: nano...@halcyon.com
"Nanotechnology: Solutions for the future."
I believe those that believe in cryonics believe in a pipe dream, dead is
dead. Once the brain stop working, the mind is gone. Whether you believe in
a soul or not, in order to keep the mind alive the brain must keep working.
In other words freezing the brain may save the brain, but I believe it kills
the mind.
[ Moderator's note: This response and likely replies fall outside the scope
of this group's charter and focus. But I'll allow one rebuttal post (if
any are sent; I'll select only one if more than one arrive) - all other
replies on the subject of the permanence of brain death will be redirected
to the newsgroup sci.cryonics. -JimL ]
Mind and memory (except short-term ones) don't appear to depend on
constant electrical activity in the brain, as certain kinds of brain
surgury requiring cooling (albeit not freezing) and intentionally
flatlining patients for almost an hour, would suggest.
> [ Moderator's note: This response and likely replies fall outside the scope
> of this group's charter and focus. But I'll allow one rebuttal post (if
> any are sent; I'll select only one if more than one arrive) - all other
> replies on the subject of the permanence of brain death will be redirected
> to the newsgroup sci.cryonics. -JimL ]
Agreed.
--
You know what to remove, to reply....
[ Moderator's note: And that's the last post I'm afraid I can allow on this
interesting, but off topic, subject. -JimL ]